12/24/2022 0 Comments Create a footnote in word 2003![]() ![]() Over a million of these statements are printed each year, just pushing text onto one additional page, can be a big thing. If the master documents have all to be changed, it will be a lot of work for a lot of people. Is these satements that tend to cause the problem, as the users are struggling to get everything onto the required number of pages. Some of these documents are financial statements with legally required content. Unfortunately, as you can imagine, this is not the answer I had hoped for :-)īeing at the developer end of the food chain, this problem has ramifications for us, as we have close to 100 clients, many of which use around 2000 or so regular documents. ![]() It's good to get a definitive statement on this sort of a problem. So try reducing the size of the header/footer to: Margin + spece required for the font size IOW at some point, someone reduced the size of the margins, but didn't reduce the starting points for the header/footers accordingly. ![]() I'm guessing that the margins settings are very small and that the From Edge are as large or larger (probably still the default). Go to File/Page Setup (I'm assuming 2003 or earlier, since that's a version you mention) and look at the settings here, paying special heed to 1) Top/Bottom margin and 2) Headers and footers: From Edge. The page setup settings should be such that the header/footer is not larger than the top/bottom margins. Those end-user questions are usually more along the lines of "why do I see all those grayed-out paragraph marks"Ī document shouldn't be set up such that putting something into the header/footer would cause a problem. This kind of question actually turns up more in end-user support groups than developer groups but yes, the behavior is known and "by design". So is anybody able to a) replicate this problem and b) have a solution to it. To those versions, but documented evidence to support presence in later versions has not yet been forthcoming. It would appear, from client feedback, that this problem is present in Word 2000 and Word 2003 but not confined Now, out there, in the real world, this behaviour is causing serious concern, as text is getting pushed down the page and tables broken up etc. The same effect can be seen by accessing the Range property (so long as it exists) of any of the 6 possible HeaderFooters in a section. However, if I them access the Range property of this footer, I suddenly find that I have acquired 5 new headers and footers, all with a newline in them (ie Word has created one of every possible type of HeaderFooter). At this point, a diagnostic added to the automation shows a single HeaderFooter (a Primary Flooter). I have narrowed down the condition to the following:Ī Word 2003 document that has a single line of text in a single page in a single section. I have a problem with layout being changed due to spurious headers (and footers) being created when doing automated editing of a document (using C++). ![]()
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